Comparison of phytoplankton blooms triggered by two typhoons with different intensities and translation speeds in the South China Sea (original) (raw)

Two phytoplankton blooms in the South China Sea (SCS), triggered by 2 typhoons with different intensities and translation speeds, were compared using remotely sensed chlorophyll a (chl a), sea surface temperature (SST), vector wind field, and best-track typhoon data. Typhoon Ling-Ling in 2001 was strong, with a maximum sustained surface wind speed of 59 m s -1 , and fast-moving with a mean translation speed of 4.52 m s -1 . Typhoon Kai-Tak in 2005 was weak with a maximum sustained surface wind speed of 46 m s -1 , and slow-moving with a mean translation speed of 2.87 m s -1 . The weak, slow-moving typhoon Kai-Tak induced phytoplankton blooms with higher chl a concentrations, while the strong, fast-moving typhoon Ling-Ling induced blooms over a larger area. On average, about 7 typhoons per year affect the SCS, among which 41% are strong (> 50 m s -1 ) and 59% are weak, while 64% are fast-moving (> 4.4 m s -1 ) and 36% are slow-moving. We conservatively estimate that typhoon periods may account for 3.5% of the annual primary production in the oligotrophic SCS.

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